Last-Minute Agreement
Ends Government Shutdown, Suspends Debt Ceiling
After a 16-day
federal government shutdown and gridlock over whether to raise the nation's
debt ceiling, a last-minute agreement brought a temporary end to the impasse.
The measure, formally known as the "Continuing Appropriations Act,
2014," was passed by both houses of Congress and signed by President Obama
shortly after midnight on October 17--the day on which the Treasury had said it
would begin running out of cash to pay the nation's bills.
The debt ceiling
represents a limit on the amount the Treasury is allowed to borrow to manage
the national debt (the total amount currently owed by the U.S. government). An
increase in the debt limit does not authorize additional government spending,
which only Congress can approve; it enables the Treasury to help manage its
cash flow and pay bills that have already been incurred.
Technically,
hitting the debt ceiling is not the same as defaulting on payments. In fact,
the Treasury actually hit the debt ceiling in May, and has been using various
accounting measures since then to temporarily extend its ability to borrow.
That created greater uncertainty about whether hitting the debt ceiling on
October 17 would have prevented the country from meeting its financial
obligations. That was a special concern not only for recipients of Social
Security and Medicare benefits but also for investors. Because Treasuries have
traditionally been seen as the safest sovereign debt in the world, overseas
investors hold a substantial amount of it. The uncertainty helped underscore
fears not only of a default, but that some countries might increase calls for
alternatives to the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency.
How will the agreement affect financial
markets?
Investors'
immediate reaction to the news was extremely positive. Word on Thursday that a
deal had been reached sent the S&P 500 up 1.4% and added 206 points to the
Dow Jones Industrial Average in a single day. Even if that enthusiasm fades as
equities once again start to respond to other influences, it was a far cry from
the reaction to the 2011 extension of the debt ceiling, which was followed by a
10.6% decline in the S&P over the week following the August 2 signing. But
investors now must turn their attention once again to corporate earnings season
and the question of whether the shutdown's economic impact will affect when the
Federal Reserve starts to taper its economic support.
The new agreement
also helps protect the nation's credit rating from a threatened downgrade that
would have affected borrowing costs. Yields on 1-month Treasury bills, which
had soared in October when several institutional investors began unloading them
as the debt ceiling deadline neared, were cut in half overnight after the
announcement.*
When will government agencies return to
fully functional status?
The roughly
800,000 federal employees furloughed during the shutdown were instructed by the
Office of Management and Budget to be ready to return to work the day after the
agreement was signed. However, individual agencies may vary depending on the
method each uses to notify employees, who will be entitled to receive back pay
for the shutdown period.
What was the economic impact of the
shutdown?
Standard &
Poor's estimated that as of the day before the agreement, the shutdown had cost
the U.S. economy $24 billion, cutting roughly 0.6% from inflation-adjusted Q4
gross domestic product.** (S&P also estimated that had there been a
default, the result would have put the economy into recession.)
*Source: U.S. Treasury Resource Center
(www.treasury.gov) Daily Treasury Yield Curve Rates as of 10/17/2013.
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